Monday, February 21, 2011

Nearly one year ago George Rodrigue moved his New Orleans gallery from its rented location of twenty years at the corner of Royal Street and Orleans Street to a permanent location at the corner of Royal Street and Pere Antoine Alley, adjacent to St. Louis Cathedral.

Although outward appearances suggest a simple move across the street, the change holds resounding significance for an artist who longed for a gallery of his own and who remains deeply connected to an historical city.The week we signed the purchase papers, the Monseigneur himself called to ‘welcome us to the neighborhood,’ despite a relocation of no more than twenty feet.

The new Rodrigue Gallery takes up an enormous space on the bottom floor of a four-story historic French Quarter building.For now, we rent out all but two apartments on the upper floors, destined in our dreams to be the Rodrigue Museum.A small second floor space overlooks Pere Antoine Alley, named for a popular pastor from 1774 until his death in 1829.Together with his friend, Voodoo Priestess Marie Laveau, they focused their efforts on assisting New Orleans’ large slave population, especially women and children.

Across Pere Antoine Alley, our second-floor vantage grants an excellent view of St. Anthony’s Garden, the green space directly behind St. Louis Cathedral.The space dates back to the early 1700s as not only a garden, but also a place for gatherings, markets, meals, rental property, and even a temporary church.Pere Antoine used the space as a kitchen garden, feeding the church’s monks.

“The site exceeded expectations in its ability to reveal how the early city was constructed – from its earliest temporary architecture (ca. 1717-1726) and the meals that Governor Bienville’s pioneers were eating, to the unexpected influence of Native Americans in the form of hybrid pottery, decorated pipe bowls, and a hut with an axe-hewn rectangular European form and possible palmetto thatch walls of Native American technique.”

Furthermore, the excavations turned up interesting finds of clothing, accessories, coins, and other items from late eighteenth and early nineteenth century New Orleans, when Orleans Street and its raised sidewalks* continued past Royal Street, ending at the church’s back door.

(*Early man-made levees along the Mississippi River extended a mere four to six feet in height, meaning that the city often flowed with water)

With a significant purchase of property in this, a unique and historical American city, comes responsibility.George Rodrigue recognized this from the start and spent nearly a year shoring up walls, replacing dangerous and outdated electrical wiring, and above all else, focusing on general clean-up.With the gallery open and the building near-completed (although admittedly an indefinite work-in-progress), we now focus our attention on the green space known as St. Anthony’s Garden, named for Anthony of Lisbon and Padua (1195-1231*), ‘finder of lost things’ and ‘protector of childless women,’ and located behind St. Louis Cathedral.

(*St. Anthony lived during the construction of Notre Dame Cathedral in Paris)

We feel responsible for this space not only because of our building’s proximity, but also because it sits at the heart of New Orleans, a city we adore and call home.In addition, it is the backdrop for dozens of artists who hang their work on the iron fence, continuing a New Orleans tradition keenly important to George Rodrigue.

Together with a committee headed by New Orleans resident Sarah Dunbar, we aim to restore this green space to plans sensitive to the garden’s diverse history, as laid out by French landscape architect Louis Benech (drawings below), who lead the restoration of the Tuilleries Gardens in Paris during the 1990s.

Benech’s plan uses native plants as well as “centuries of botanical exchanges between Louisiana and its settlers, among whom are the French, Spanish, English, German, Native Americans, West Indians, Africans, Irish and Italians,” ultimately celebrating the different ages of this unique site.

Furthermore, the garden’s restoration looks long-term, towards up-keep, security, and docents, so that the space becomes beautiful not only as viewed through the iron fence, but also up close and personal, open to the public.

With Mr. Benech’s completed plans in hand, our timing involves significant fund-raising this year, culminating in ‘La Fete du Jardin’ with Monsieur Benech in April 2012, when we cut the ribbon and begin the garden’s transformation.I’ll keep you updated with our progress throughout the year, including the launch of our website this spring, which I’ll post under “More Art and News” to the right of this essay.

Wendy

Suggested reading:Intimate Enemies: The Two Worlds of the Baroness de Pontalba by Christina Vella, 1997, Louisiana State University Press; Voodoo Queen: The Spirited Lives of Marie Laveau, 2004, University Press of Mississippi

Sprinkled throughout this post:variations of Flowers Bring Me Luck and Stardust Acres, original silkscreens from 1996 by George Rodrigue

1 comment:

This is wonderful news Wendy!I have a few photos of the statue of Christ set in the garden; I had wondered often how the area had fared and also remember the many cats that were fed by the fence opposite your building.It is good for someone to finally get some of the real history out about Pere Antoine and Marie Laveau, a team that worked charity in many ways in hard times.I am so happy about the proposed restoration of the garden....I tell you, I am almost in tears!Blue Dog has abundantly blessed the city, and I hope that people can see past those yearning bright eyes to the artist and wife who are helping return so much....May you both be blessed abundantly with many happy years on the corner and Blue Dog gazing out with joy....

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About Me

I was born on a military base and raised in Fort Walton Beach, FL.
Attended Trinity University in San Antonio, TX, majoring in Art History and English, followed by European Art and Architecture in Vienna, Austria, and graduate school at Tulane University in New Orleans.
Worked for the Rodrigue Gallery in New Orleans and later Carmel, CA, beginning in 1991, and married George Rodrigue in 1997.
I've written guest columns for publications including Gambit, Country Roads Magazine, and Louisiana Cultural Vistas. As of 2017 I live between New Orleans, Louisiana and Santa Fe, New Mexico. I work extensively on George Rodrigue exhibitions and publishing projects, and lecture widely on his art.
I remain involved full-time within Rodrigue gallery operations and the George Rodrigue Foundation of the Arts, with an ongoing focus on preserving and enhancing Rodrigue's artistic and philanthropic legacy.
My first solo book, "The Other Side of the Painting" (UL Press), was published October 2013.